INGLÊS

Transcrição

INGLÊS
GOVERNO DO ESTADO DO RIO DE JANEIRO
Concurso Público
Professor Docente I
INGLÊS
Data: 19/05/2013
Duração: 4 horas
Caro(a) Candidato(a), leia atentamente e siga as instruções abaixo.
01- A lista de presença deve, obrigatoriamente, ser assinada no recebimento do Cartão de Respostas e assinada novamente na
sua entrega, na presença e nos locais indicados pelo fiscal da sala.
02- Você recebeu do fiscal o seguinte material:
a) Este Caderno, com 50 (cinquenta) questões da Prova Objetiva, sem repetição ou falha, conforme distribuição abaixo:
Português
Conhecimentos
Pedagógicos
01 a 15
Conhecimentos
Específicos
16 a 30
31 a 50
b) Um Cartão de Respostas destinado às respostas das questões objetivas formuladas nas provas.
03- Verifique se este material está em ordem e se o seu nome e número de inscrição conferem com os que aparecem no Cartão de
Respostas. Caso contrário, notifique imediatamente o fiscal.
04- Após a conferência, o candidato deverá assinar no espaço próprio do Cartão de Respostas, com caneta esferográfica de tinta
na cor azul ou preta.
05- No Cartão de Respostas, a marcação da alternativa correta deve ser feita cobrindo a letra e preenchendo todo o espaço interno
do quadrado, com caneta esferográfica de tinta na cor azul ou preta, de forma contínua e densa.
Exemplo:
A
B
C
D
E
06- Para cada uma das questões objetivas, são apresentadas 5 (cinco) alternativas classificadas com as letras (A, B, C, D e E), mas
só uma responde adequadamente à questão proposta. Você só deve assinalar uma alternativa. A marcação em mais de uma
alternativa anula a questão, mesmo que uma das respostas esteja correta.
07- Será eliminado do Processo Seletivo o candidato que:
a) Utilizar ou consultar cadernos, livros, notas de estudo, calculadoras, telefones celulares, pagers, walkmans, réguas, esquadros,
transferidores, compassos, MP3, Ipod, Ipad e quaisquer outros recursos analógicos.
b) Ausentar-se da sala, a qualquer tempo, portando o Cartão de Respostas.
Observações: Por motivo de segurança, o candidato só poderá retirar-se da sala após 1 (uma) hora a partir do início da prova.
O candidato que optar por se retirar sem levar seu Caderno de Questões não poderá copiar sua marcação de
respostas, em qualquer hipótese ou meio. O descumprimento dessa determinação será registrado em ata,
acarretando a eliminação do candidato.
Somente decorridas 3 horas de prova, o candidato poderá retirar-se levando o seu Caderno de Questões.
08- Reserve os 30 (trinta) minutos finais para marcar seu Cartão de Respostas. Os rascunhos e as marcações assinaladas no
Caderno de Questões não serão levados em conta.
www.ceperj.rj.gov.br
[email protected]
Professor Docente I - INGLÊS
CONHECIMENTOS ESPECÍFICOS
Questions 31 to 38 address both the teaching of English as a foreign
language and the Parâmetros Curriculares Nacionais (PCNs)
31. The three basic building blocks for successful foreign language
teaching and learning may be described as Engage, Study and
Activate (Harmer, 1997:32).
The main aim of Activate is to:
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
build up the students’ emotions in class
arouse the students’ interest in the topic of the lesson
focus the students’ attention on linguistic structures
direct the students’ attention to information construction
let the students try out real language use with little or no restriction
32. Match each teaching model on the left to its corresponding
characteristic on the right:
Teaching models
Characteristics
1- Audio-lingualism
teaching
(
2- Communicative language
teaching
(
3- Grammar-translation
(
4- Task-based learning
(
) use of authentic texts;
emphasis on the development
of communication skills
) use of bilingual word lists;
emphasis on the development
of reading and writing skills
) use of drills; emphasis on the
development of oral skills
) use of problem solving and
situations; emphasis on the
successful completion of
activities
The only correct sequence is expressed by:
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
2-3-4-1
1-4-3-2
2-3-1-4
4-1-3-2
1-4-2-3
33. According to the PCNs, one of the contributions of Cognitivism
to the teaching of foreign languages is expressed by the:
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
attention given to different learning styles
focus on the teacher and the teaching process
emphasis on the production of error free language
role of memory in the process of learning a second language
idea that learners’ interaction is central to the learning process
34. Despite the problems created by big classes, there are things
which teachers can do to overcome them (Harmer, 1998:128). The
author provides a list of such activities and advises teachers to avoid:
A) using worksheets to check the answers to a given task
B) setting pair work and group work as they can be difficult to control
C) writing on the board as students at the back will probably not
see it
D) nominating a few students as group leaders as they do not
always help
E) using a considerable amount of individual repetition and controlled
practice activities
35. Theories, assumptions and beliefs about the nature of language and
language learning are defined at a specific level, which encompasses a
number of:
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
approaches
techniques
methods
schemes
models
36. The use of authentic materials in the reading classroom is
seen as essential for the development of learner reading skills
and, according to Nuttall (1996:172), real texts provide for realistic
needs of real people. This said, one of the main advantages of using
authentic materials in the classroom is the effect generated on:
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
lexical processing
intrinsic motivation
translation practice
cultural assimilation
structural patterning
37. According to Thornbury (1997:151), a number of factors can
determine the selection of vocabulary items for teaching. One of
them is Coverage, which refers to how:
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
often the item occurs in natural language
easy it is to learn and remember the item
simple it is to present, teach and test the item
relevant the item is to the students’ needs.
varied the contexts in which the item may be used are
38. When choosing texts for the reading lesson, text-related
concepts such as Suitability of content, Exploitability and
Readability should be taken into consideration. The concept of
Readability is related to the:
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
retrieval of general meanings
consideration of learner needs
assessment of complexity levels
purpose of classroom procedures
presentation of reading strategies
GOVERNO DO ESTADO DO RIO DE JANEIRO - Secretaria de Estado de Educação - SEEDUC
Fundação Centro Estadual de Estatística, Pesquisa e Formação de Servidores Públicos do Rio de Janeiro - CEPERJ
5
Professor Docente I - INGLÊS
Now, read through the text below, adapted from The New York
Times <www.nytimes.com/2013/02/17> and based on its contents
answer questions 39 to 50.
5
10
If you want to know why people come to Rio de Janeiro, and
came even during its years of bloody, decadent decline, stand on
the Arpoador Beach promenade at day’s end. Before you lies an
orchestral finale of a sunset: iridescent water, pastel-streaked skies
and hazy silhouettes of cliffs to the west. At the moment when the
neon-pink sun slips below the horizon, everyone stops, stands and
claps: a nightly salute to city, beach and sky.
This was part of why my 7-year-old daughter and I traveled
to Rio in December. Rio may be the most voluptuous city in the
world, with soft beaches, dramatic mountains, waterfalls, a rain
forest, lagoon and orchids — planted by residents — peeking out
of lush old trees lining the streets; papayas and jackfruit drop from
branches all over town, symbols of the city’s overabundant sweetness. The place does make Miami look like Cleveland.
30
I had another reason as well: I wanted to test out the new,
supposedly safer Rio. Until recently, it had been considered a
laughably inappropriate destination for a mother-daughter trip,
with a highway from the airport that closed sometimes because
of drug-related shootouts and warnings to tourists that began with
phrases like “to minimize the chance of kidnapping ...” But in the
past several years, a strong national economy combined with the
honor of hosting the Olympics in 2016 has been motivating the city
of six million to remake itself. Brazilian authorities have boasted
that Rio’s murder rate has plunged to the lowest point in decades;
apparently below those of American cities like Baltimore and St.
Louis. Drug gangs have been chased from their former strongholds
in the coastal neighborhoods favored by tourists. Travel magazines
describe Rio as a place to be, and for children it seemed as if it
could be paradisiacal, with bird-size monkeys, sorbets made of
mysterious Amazonian fruits. I booked two tickets.
35
But once I started reaching out to friends and travel agents who
really knew the city, I stiffened with apprehension, worried that Rio’s
rehabilitation was more public relations coup than reality. So we
set off with a question: Would it be possible to experience Rio with
maximum pleasure and minimal risk?
15
20
25
…….
40
45
We flew home to the US that night, our Rio experiment at an
end. There was no way the city had lived up to the here-comethe-Olympics, everything-is-awesome-now hype I had seen in
some travel magazines. Still, the city was easily the most visually
dazzling place I had ever seen. We’d gotten acquainted with one of
the world’s only other great multiracial democracies, experienced
strange and wonderful new fruits, fed those monkeys, tried our
tongues at Portuguese and bought fabulous sandals. We also paid
a visit to newly ´pacified´ Rocinha, a sunlit walk through a busy
neighborhood with police officers posted every few hundred yards.
And we were fine. I hope my daughter had learned the beginnings
of an important travel lesson: Just because a place is not perfect
doesn’t mean it isn’t worth the trip.
39. One way in which a text is bound together is through cohesion. In the excerpt “If you want to know why people come to Rio
de Janeiro, and came even during its years of bloody, decadent
decline (…)” (lines 1-2), cohesion operates in the underlined elements by means of:
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
phrasal ellipsis
nominal substitution
pronominal reference
clausal ellipsis
phrasal substitution
40. In order to understand the core meaning of verbs, one must
take into consideration the notions of time and tense. In the passage:
“At the moment when the neon-pink sun slips below the horizon,
everyone stops, stands and claps: a nightly salute to city, beach
and sky.” (lines 5-7), the tense used conveys the idea of:
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
regular or habitual events or states
general truths and permanent facts about the world
facts which are considered true at the present time
feelings and reactions experienced at the moment of speaking
emphasis on the continued existence, relevance of things from
the past
41. Demonstrative pronouns in English may be used in different
ways to refer to segments of a text or ideas within a text. In the
excerpt “This was part of why my 7-year-old daughter and I traveled
to Rio in December.”, (lines 8-9) the pronoun this refers to the fact
that the writer wanted to:
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
see the most sensual city in the world
pay a visit to a place that outshines Miami
set eyes on contrasting sea, sky and landscape
experience urban beauty worthy of applause
determine the reason why tourists had never ceased to visit Rio
42. The function of does in “The place does make Miami look
like Cleveland” (line 14) is typical of :
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
lexical verbs
semi-modals
substitute verbs
complex auxiliaries
emphatic declaratives
43. The passive voice in the excerpt “Until recently, it had been
considered a laughably inappropriate destination for a motherdaughter trip.” (lines 16-17) is being used because the agent:
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
has to be highlighted
is inexplicit and pronominalized
is unknown and generalized
must be inanimate and unspecified
should be made explicit and is nominalized
44. Verb phrases signal certain concepts. In the excerpt “(…) a
strong national economy has been motivating the city of six million
to remake itself.” (lines 21-23) and “Brazilian authorities have boasted that Rio’s murder rate has plunged.” (lines 23-24), the concept
being signalled is that of:
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
aspect
mood
modality
time
voice
45. Conjunctions are items used to mark logical relationships
between words, phrases, clauses or sentences. The conjunction
which could be inserted before the sentence “I booked two tickets.”
(line 30) in order to emphasize its logical relationship with the
preceding sentence is:
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
‘because’ signalling causation
‘meanwhile’ signalling time
‘but ‘ signalling contrast
‘yet’ signalling concession
‘thus’ signalling consequence
GOVERNO DO ESTADO DO RIO DE JANEIRO - Secretaria de Estado de Educação - SEEDUC
Fundação Centro Estadual de Estatística, Pesquisa e Formação de Servidores Públicos do Rio de Janeiro - CEPERJ
6
Professor Docente I - INGLÊS
46. Indirect speech/thought is a reconstruction of the words/thoughts
of a speaker conveyed in a reported clause. The acceptable way to
report “Would it be possible to experience Rio with maximum pleasure
and minimal risk?” (lines 34-35) is conveyed by:
A) She reckoned it should be possible to experience Rio with
maximum pleasure and minimal risk
B) She argued Rio should be experienced with maximum pleasure
and minimal risk
C) She wondered if it might be possible to experience Rio with
maximum pleasure and minimal risk
D) She suggested she might experience Rio with maximum pleasure
and minimal risk
E) She considered the idea of experiencing Rio with maximum
pleasure and minimal risk
47. Many English verbs consist of two parts: a lexical verb followed
by one or two particles. In this way the only two phrasal verbs as
they appear in the text are:
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
come to (line 1) and stand on (line 2)
peeking out of (line 11) and drop from (line 12)
slips below (line 6) and look like (line 14)
test out (line 15) and live up to (line 38)
reaching out to (line 31) and set off (line 34)
48. The main communicative function of the second paragraph
is to:
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
dispute
describe
argue
narrate
dissuade
49. The choice of lexical items in the third paragraph implies that
the author:
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
believed everything she read about Rio in the news
consulted sources that she did not regard as trustworthy
acknowledged that Rio de Janeiro had changed for the better
felt unsure about what Rio de Janeiro was really like
reckoned that local authorities had fought crime effectively
50. The most suitable title for the New York Times text, bearing
in mind its overall communicative function, is “Rio:
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
the best of everything”
paradise on Earth”
still decadent after all this time”
not enough time for the Olympics”
a visit with eyes wide open”
GOVERNO DO ESTADO DO RIO DE JANEIRO - Secretaria de Estado de Educação - SEEDUC
Fundação Centro Estadual de Estatística, Pesquisa e Formação de Servidores Públicos do Rio de Janeiro - CEPERJ
7
Professor Docente I - INGLÊS
GOVERNO DO ESTADO DO RIO DE JANEIRO - Secretaria de Estado de Educação - SEEDUC
Fundação Centro Estadual de Estatística, Pesquisa e Formação de Servidores Públicos do Rio de Janeiro - CEPERJ
8

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